ISHE 2I1T~~ L7~T TSAT I 0 , XVL NO. 27. MISSOULA, MONTANA, W'flDNESDAY 3IOfNING, JUNE 2, 199. PRD MOR OPENIG ANNUNCE i asThat Will Govern Registration and Entry n Lands in Reservation Given in Detail. TiHE LCAL LAND OFFICE REEYIES A BULLETIN Deltiled Stattenent of ulles That Must Be Observed by Tliose e'sfirmg to S'ecu Lands it, the FIathead, Coeur d'Alene and Spokane Reservations Con tained in Letter From Fred Denilett. A (dtailed statement qf the rules thd 'egulations which will govern, the application for registration, and eptry upon lands In the Flathead, Coeur d'Alene and Spokane Indian, reservatlo e, to be opened on July: 15 is cgntalned in an dfficial letter from Unted Statps Land Comission ef FrWd flennett to James W. Wit ten, tpferlntendent of the open ing. Th se rules and regulations, were decided tjpon at a conference of the 'jchbrai land office officials and arb approved Secretary of the In trior it, 4. alIinger. The letter in the form of an' official bulletin of the dep...

ASNGJTON NEWS THN ,I0Lb 4'ou 1e ;ptIAL SR VIo.L Washington, , . Jne 1.-4-'he civil service commission has an nounced two examinatiorn for govehit khent postionit whih 'will be held' in June at Mlss8isla. The first, on June 16, is to sedtiie :an inspection :,of furnittire for the army, with staftoii at chlcago, 'a. $150 aa 4 $165 a nihtlth; On June 80 the .exaimiination Will be to secure a timber cruiser for the general i4pri4office service in the field, at 7 per diem. The war department has granted Captain Laurence Halstead, of 'the Sixth infantry, "at' 1'ort Missoula, leave of absence for a month and a half beginning Julys1. The 1008 report of Mips Estelle Reel, the superintendeot of,. the Indian schools, ,Jp an, interesting document, showing, the :advance .of the red men of'. Amernia. It: is a document of 47 p rges an ..came-, from the press of tie Chilocdo Indian Training school in Oklahoma It is replete .with illus trations ',sbowihg the change education has made in the Indians....

V.. AUTOMOBILE RACERS [EAYEN[W(YORK FIVE GCARS START IN LONG OCEAN-TO-OCEAN CONTEST FOR SEATTLE FAIR. New York, June 1.-Five motor cars competing for a $2,000 trophy offered by Robert Guggenheim started today from the NeW York city hail on a 4.000-mile endurance run to Seattle. Mayer McClellan sent them away with a gold-mounted starting pistol at 3 o'clock, just before President Taft pressed the button in Washington that officially opened the Alaska-Yukon Pacific exposition in Seattle. * The cars and their drivers were: Two 15-horse power Ford run abouts, Frank Kuly 'and B. W. Scott; 50-horse power Acme: George Salz man;. 40-horse power Shawmnus,, G. A, Pettingili; 45-horse power Italia, Gus Lechleitier. 41 There Were originally 13 entrants. When first proposed the race was dis ccilntenaned by', the Manufacturers' Cogmtest association, which does not approve speed 'contests in violation of the law. The American Automobile association took the ground that as an international, contest...

TE WEATHER THE FIA T TV MISSOtTILtA.N Tomorrow-Fair. DIAEo 1tUfVE goeN VOL. XXVVI. XO. 38. AIQ~ll , MSpu~k ONTANA, TIIUR8DY HORNING,, JUNE, 3, 1909. PRICE 9IE ADE CITY ATTRACTING SENTO NTICE SENATOR DONLAN SAYS MIS SOULA 1S THE WESTERN TOWN MOST TALKED OF IN EAST. MANY PEOPLEARE COMINC Missoula Man 'Returns From Trip East With Glowing Account of the Attention That Is Being Given Montana and Especially the Coming Flathead Opening-Talks With Ryan. State Senator Donlan returned yes. terday morning from a trip to New York, Washington and other eastern "cities. The trip was a matter of per sonal business, and as soon as it was transacted Mr. Donlan returned home. Seen at his home last night by a Mis soulian reporter, Senator Donlan said: "I had a pleas".s trio, though a busy one. I epent'two days in Wash ington and went from there up to New York, where I had business Which kept me for a couple of days. Two days more were spent in St. Paul; the rest of the time that I have been gone has b...

!eg on South Higpnas re directly aros the mtreet from the Hendmond addition, where lots are ellig for $00 each. a G3rgg these two *or 8t00 . r both, and khey are dirt cheap. -4 . . ihoades A. ESTATE AND INSURANCE DEALER: I HIggwin Avenue. Phon* O7n iM~ssq~p sLOCk. MISSIfiEHS FAVRY PIBdtIfY SCHiEM Testerday the county commissioners ie a letter from George B. , imml piigrt agent forn:. the. co, agiltalee & Puget 84tuti, ir stdvgrtlsing Montana's re * ppecial car filled with. bits of livid and orchard. While comilssionere took no definite ac n,"if t W 1hatbtood that they re= the proposition in a favorable t?, aan that they will attempt to d, a representation for Missoula retail liquor licengp was gralii aerdy by the commissioners so u cEachbon, who wilL open a satoo Mc amara's landing on the MITadlC TAKEN HOME. : LLa4Et Vh* 6se Panbrum, Weed iAmtheti brtde of four days, was takens bank to the reservation by her irate p*rtate Ar ": d Mr#. John Panahr of, .ooko. t other member of th....

IIREA L AY WORLD LOLQ tIADF .IS EASY ENQINEEft' AY THE CROSSING OF THE EDIVIDE IS EXCEL LENT AT THAT POINT. F. W. Gilbert was in Missoula yes terday fronm his home in Lolo, and gave some interesting details of the work Of the surveyors in the Lolo pas." 'Lolo' 's busy thesp days; the mere handling of the supplies for the surveyois furnishes a good deal of husid'ds, and the preparations for construction work, which are going on all the while, add to the new life which is being infused into the little town at the foot of the pass. "There are, I think, more than 180 men in the pass at present." said Mr. Gilbert to a Missoulian man yesterday afternoon. "There are four Harriman outfits and three of the Northern Pa cific. Pack trainis are moving up the pass every day with supplies for these camps, and they carry a lot of stuf ; it takes a good deal to feed so many 'men in the field. "We have, as you know, a regular telegraph office at Lolo now, and the operator has plenty of business. We ...

REMARKABLE SCHOOL DOWN IN TENNESSEE President W. G. Frost of Berea col lege, a class in forestry and some of tfe charming co-eds. Berea, Ky., June 2.-The recent de cision rendered by the United States supreme court relative to negro and white students in Kentucky colleges has' brought to the front one of the most remarkable institutions of the south land. 'Working along: modestly from year to year, Berea college has attracted little attention outside of its own state but it has been a great factor and a great storm center ever since long before the \var. The decision forded the separation of the white students and the blacks and called for more funds. Mrs. Sage and others have comb forward with magnificent gifts to the amount of $500;000: This is largely due to the enb'rgy of its president, Dr. Frost. For 40 years.-from the time of 'the emancipation :proclamation until the passage of the separation law in 1904, Berea;..was freely. opened to all. negro studentsi'wbo .cared to enter i...

kere Itis Take It The best lots in the best town inrl g,4 q st lte in the .best na t'it World4lh is the claim whip we make for prop erty irl < airihdiid" addition. These lots. are ideal in their 1ualities., Xf a, man is seek. ing a site for a home, these. lots itihsb him as n the best place he'has ever seen; they win him at ftflCe by the beauty of their location and the delight of their surroundings. If he is an in vt tor,"hd ' coguites;' at once that 'these lots are certain to fncrease in value and that his inoxiey, .placed he %e,. will grow while he attends to other mat ,t "alta' the 'first phase of the juestion-the home loca Lion; the mnan who wants an Y", IdcEl pice .for l plrmanent jbode finds, here every condi tidu that he edald desire. These ots are just far enough from b _eijer i 4'he city it(d ~et ,t'nd 'hbsence of the bustle tof the actie thor, bughfairj~leAcldlkhtfully situated in a commanding loca tion, with the finest view in the world' Alwa s spread out before hemn ...